Welcome to The Potato Museum

Here is the latest edition of The Potato Museum, online since the early 90s, with features, exhibits from our collections as well as interactive modules, teacher and student resources, our Facebook page and shop. The Potato Museum, started in 1975 in Brussels, Belgium, is the world's first museum about the potato and features the planet's largest collection about this valuable vegetable. It also may well be the first museum to be online, especially about food. Thanks Gayle.

Not a product of the potato industry, The Potato Museum is a non-profit educational organization dedicated to exploring the potato's fascinating past, controversial present and promising future. Contact us with your ideas for a permanent home for The Potato Museum.

Enjoy a quick walkabout of Spuds Unearthed!, an exhibition at the US Botanic Garden, in Washington, DC that ran from May-October 2010. The Potato Museum collaborated with USBG on the project.

Spuds Unearthed! at the US Botanic Garden, Washington, DC

The Potato Museum's "Amazing Potato" Exhibition at Canada's Museum of Science and Technology

Why The Potato?

In his 1998 book, Man on Earth, author John Reader said it well:

Seeing the beauty of a potato field in bloom for the first time surprises many people. Its flowers--clean white, blush pink, soft violet, even a deep blue. And its simple parallel lines, green alternating with color. Agricultural landscapes hold their own with any other.

The potato itself is unique among plants for its quiet influence on the world's history and culture. From its origins in the Andes mountains, the potato has traveled farther than any vegetable, around the globe and to the outskirts of the Moon. It has inserted deep roots in places where people think it has always been. That's why many call it the "Irish potato," or the Idaho spud.

In the space of just 400 years, the potato has become a staple crop of many people around the world whose antecedents had subsisted perfectly well upon grain crops for anything up to 4000 years. The reason for this somewhat surprising development is that the potato is the best all-around bundle of nutrition known to mankind.

Its ration of carbohydrate to protein is such that anyone eating enough potatoes to satisfy their energy requirements will automatically obtain most of the protein they require. Furthermore, the "biological value" of potato protein (an index of the nitrogen absorbed from a food and retained by the body for growth and maintenance) is 73, second only to eggs at 96; just ahead of soybeans at 72, but far superior to corn (maize) at 54 and wheat at 53.

Potatoes also contain significant amounts of essential vitamins (the British, in fact, used to derive 30% of their vitamin C intake from potatoes.) Exceptional productivity is another virtue of the potato. A field of potatoes produces more energy per hectare per day than a field of any other crop. Potatoes grow well from sea level to 14,000 feet on a wider variety of soils, under a wider range of climatic conditions, than any other staple food. The potato matures faster in 90 to 120 days, and will provide small but edible tubers in just 60 days.

All in all, the potato is about the world's most efficient means of converting plant, land, water and labour into a palatable and nutritious food.

Reader's book Potato, A History of the Propitious Esculent, was published in 2009.

Listen to Meredith and Tom Hughes Discuss the Potato, Their Museum and The International Year of the Potato with Melissa Block of NPR's "All Things Considered."

On New Year's Eve we donned our potato skins and did an interview with Melissa Block for All Things Considered on National Public Radio. Her producer called us in line with the United Nations' dubbing of 2008 as the International Year of the Potato.

While you listen (laptop only) view exhibits on our former and still relevant blog "PotatoheadsTalking."